Sunday, March 4, 2018

Series: Building Strength for the Trials, Part 3 WORSHIP

The heavens proclaim the glory of God.  The skies display his craftsmanship.  Day after day they continue to speak; night after night they make him known.  They speak without a sound or word; their voice is never heard.  Yet their message has gone throughout the earth, and their words to all the world.  God has made a home in the heavens for the sun.  It bursts forth like a radiant bridegroom after his wedding.  It rejoices like a great athlete eager to run the race.  The sun rises at one end of the heavens and follows its course to the other end.  Nothing can hide from its heat.  The instructions of the Lord are perfect, reviving the soul.  The decrees of the Lord are trustworthy, making wise the simple.  The commandments of the Lord are right, bringing joy to the heart.  The commands of the Lord are clear, giving insight for living.  Reverence for the Lord is pure, lasting forever.  The laws of the Lord are true; each one is fair.  They are more desirable than gold, even the finest gold.  They are sweeter than honey, even honey dripping from the comb.  They are a warning to your servant, a great reward for those who obey them.  How can I know all the sins lurking in my heart?  Cleanse me from these hidden faults.  Keep your servant from deliberate sins!  Don’t let them control me.  Then I will be free of guilt and innocent of great sin.  May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be pleasing to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.   Psalm 19:1-14(NLT)
It was nearly time for the Jewish Passover celebration, so Jesus went to Jerusalem.  In the Temple area he saw merchants selling cattle, sheep, and doves for sacrifices; he also saw dealers at tables exchanging foreign money.  Jesus made a whip from some ropes and chased them all out of the Temple.  He drove out the sheep and cattle, scattered the money changers’ coins over the floor, and turned over their tables.  Then, going over to the people who sold doves, he told them, “Get these things out of here. Stop turning my Father’s house into a marketplace!”  Then his disciples remembered this prophecy from the Scriptures: “Passion for God’s house will consume me.”  But the Jewish leaders demanded, “What are you doing?  If God gave you authority to do this, show us a miraculous sign to prove it.”  “All right,” Jesus replied.  “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.”  “What!” they exclaimed.  “It has taken forty-six years to build this Temple, and you can rebuild it in three days?”   But when Jesus said “this temple,” he meant his own body.  After he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered he had said this, and they believed both the Scriptures and what Jesus had said.  John 2:13-22(NLT)
We are tracking through this season of Lent, knowing that, just like with Jesus, trials and troubles will show up in life.  The overwhelming themes in Lent help us build strength to meet the trials in life. 
·       In week #1 we saw that BAPTISM, our initiation into the church, continually calls us back to the beginning of our faith – a strength you find as you remember who you are in Christ…loved and accepted.
·       In week #2 we considered our COVENANT the promises we make with God, and which God makes with us.  These are precious promises that strengthen the purpose of our walk as servants in God’s Kingdom.
This morning we want to continue our series and see how WORSHIP builds strength for the trials of life.  The fact is, if you get away from worship you will have faith in the wrong stuff (materialism, personal integrity, intelligence, college diplomas, good looks or clothes, praise of your peers rather than your Creator).
The texts[2] open up to us the character of God.  We get three front row seats to see God in action as Creator, Teacher, and Lover.  When you begin to understand the nature of God it is easier to worship Him.  He has spoken to us, as the writer of Hebrews proclaims…many times and in many ways….Hebrews 1:1b(NLT)
Psalm 19 is all about the great and wonderful gifts of God; many of us take them for granted.  Israel’s poet, King David pulls out the shopping list of these gifts and holds them up as a prayer of praise and adoration to Yahweh; it’s a Psalm of worship.  John 2 is about the Savior who came to say the definitive word about who God is; Jesus came as the living Word of God
Three statements about how worship builds strength for our trials:
As Creator God Spoke to Us Without words
God’s universe is awesome.  The cosmos, as much as we can see, and the vast creation we still haven’t discovered, are a sermon without words.  If asked, there wouldn’t be many of us who couldn’t tell of some time when raw nature gave us a powerful and lasting memory.  I am always moved by mountain scenes.  I’ve stood at the edge of Niagara Falls, the Grand Canyon, and Victoria Falls in Africa.  This magnificent world is, in the words of Eugene Peterson, God’s glory…on tour in the skies, God-craft on exhibit across the horizon.[3]
This world, this cosmos is a sermon of God’s majesty, and it plainly tells us – without a single word – God exists; only fools say in their heart there is no God[4]
For ever since the world was created, people have seen the earth and sky. Through everything God made, they can clearly see his invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature. So they have no excuse for not knowing God.  Romans 1:20(NLT)
Helen Keller, blind and deaf, even without those senses to “see” the creation wrote:  I always knew there was someone like that, I just didn’t know His name.
Without speaking a word that we can hear, God broadcasts to every living thing, that every living thing outside of God is not God!  We do well to remember frequently that only God is God
We humans tend to congratulate ourselves for our phenomenal wisdom and sophistication every time a new version of Windows or a more powerful Macintosh tablet hits the market.  But we’re confused at best, because it’s God who is the Creator; we are the creatures.  We mess around with, and rearrange HIS creation – often badly – but it is God who established everything we see.  King David also wrote these words – from everlasting to everlasting THOU art God![5]  Our prayer of thanksgiving in worshiping God begins with the cosmos – God’s universe, a sermon without words.  And then we also give thanks because:
As Teacher His Words Speak Life to Us
Often people want to debate that God’s Word is just a bunch of rules that oppress certain groups.  But that is the blind side of human beings.  By nature we all have a rebellious side; nobody enjoys having to follow rules. 
To be sure, even a lot of Christian believers want to know just how little they can believe and behave, yet still qualify for the train to heaven. 
But, if you view God’s Word rightly, you can see that it is really a lamp for your pathway through God’s world – a light that shows us how to find real joy.  His commands are words that lead to life!
One author discovered how the writer of Psalm 19 shows us there are:
·       Six titles for God’s special verbal revelation are given: law of the Lord…, testimony of the Lord, statutes of the Lord, commandment of the Lord, fear of the Lord, and judgments of the Lord
·       These six titles are given six different qualities: perfect, sure, right, pure, clean, and true
·       These six qualities have six different effects on man: converting the soul, making wise the simple, rejoicing the heart, enlightening the eyes, enduring forever, and righteous altogether.[6]
Jesus said that his words were truth, life and the way to the Father; anyone who would come near to Jesus and trust him as the guide through this life, would not only find heaven, but know deep down inside that they really belong with God.
·       So Psalm 19 tells us we come to worship giving thanks for God’s cosmos – a sermon without words. 
·       The Psalmist also says we come to worship, giving thanks for God’s commands – words that lead to life,
·       And then, finally…we discover in John’s Gospel that:
As Savior God Spoke Most Clearly of all – in Love
It hardly seems like “love” that Jesus took a whip and chased people out of church!  But then, even with the power to destroy the entire universe, sometime later Jesus would allow those same people to wrongly convict him of blasphemy, and get him executed on the cross.  The raw fact is:  both are evidence of Jesus’ love.

1. The Whip Kind of Love

As a pastor I’ve often been asked how this could be a loving representation of God, whipping the moneychangers…why not just give them a little space, endure their greed and love them unconditionally?  Why not give them a little sensitivity training and model good behavior so they will change their ways?  At least one author has stated it this way:  Spineless love is hardly love.[7]  God himself explains why He acted this way in the Jerusalem temple:
Discipline your children while there is hope.  Otherwise you will ruin their lives.  Proverbs 19:18(NLT)
The reason Jesus chased the people and animals from the temple was to teach the people what is right.  In the same way a child must be taught what is right, God knows how to teach His children.  And, we must never forget that Jesus was God in flesh! 
A side issue here would be a word to parents.  If chastening with the rod is good enough for the heavenly Father – don’t be mistaken – chastening your own children appropriately is an important part of disciplining!  To tolerate turning God’s house into a trading market with cheating as an acceptable practice…what kind of God would issue a commandment against stealing, and then wink while the moneychangers picked poor people’s pockets?  Pure fact – some people need a whuppin’!  If you don’t think God follows through on His commandments and accomplishes His purposes with finality, you need to re-read the Old Testament.  But, as much as God’s whip kind of love is an unquestionable reality, and demands our attention as well as worship, there is also:

2. The Cross Kind of Love

Now, the cross is not like some automated scrubbing bubbles that cleans your heart like a porcelain bathtub.  We don’t kneel at the cross and feel it effervescing inside as the sins melt away.  Rather it is like the mortar that binds us to Christ in faith.  And Christ is the brick mason; he is the only one who can do this job.  When you come to faith in what Christ has done for you on the cross, Jesus takes your life and cements your relationship with the Father.
The prophet Isaiah wrote that all of our righteousness – all our attempts at taking over this business of cleansing our sins – is like claiming you’re wearing a new outfit, when, in fact, you’re wearing torn and filthy rags.[8] 
King David’s life fell apart.  He was the most powerful man in the world and was loved by both God and humans.  But he had this secret; he’d gone against God’s design for his life and his sin was really bad – first degree!  He tried to cover it up by plotting an innocent man’s death; he even had other people carry it out.  The thing was somewhat hidden from humans, but God saw it like an HD movie on a 75-inch plasma screen TV. 
David had it together on the outside.  But covering the outside was like makeup on dark circles, or a Band-Aid on cancer; on the inside David was coming unglued.  And he knew it – just like you and I know it when we’ve sinned against God.
What did David do?  He ran to God with confession on his lips. 
Listen to how David recorded it in his diary.  He wrote it down, and later we labeled it Psalm 51.  Hear how it sounds in today’s language when a king repents; listen to David getting honest with God:
Generous in love—God, give grace!  Huge in mercy—wipe out my bad record.  Scrub away my guilt, soak out my sins in your laundry.  I know how bad I’ve been; my sins are staring me down.  You’re the One I’ve violated, and you’ve seen it all, seen the full extent of my evil.  You have all the facts before you; whatever you decide about me is fair.  I’ve been out of step with you for a long time, in the wrong since before I was born.  What you’re after is truth from the inside out.  Enter me, then; conceive a new, true life.  Soak me in your laundry and I’ll come out clean, scrub me and I’ll have a snow-white life.  Tune me in to foot-tapping songs, set these once-broken bones to dancing.  Don’t look too close for blemishes, give me a clean bill of health.  God, make a fresh start in me, shape a Genesis week from the chaos of my life.  Don’t throw me out with the trash, or fail to breathe holiness in me.  Bring me back from gray exile, put a fresh wind in my sails![9]  Psalm 51:1-12(TMSG)
When David got honest with God, God came – and then, there was cleansing.  That’s what God is like – and you don’t have to be a king
You don’t have to speak a special language
You do have to pour out your heart to Him
So do that; and let God do what God does; he’ll cement your life and His together.  You won’t wonder or worry about your worship, if it’s done right, done enough, or even if you ought to bother sometimes…worship will pour out of you!
You can come to this altar and ask God to make a worthy worshipper of you.  That’s what altars are for, and that’s what He is waiting for!
Let the church say Amen in the Name of the Father, Because of the Son, Cooperating with the Spirit…Amen!


[1] Title Image Courtesy Pixabay.com.
[2] (Psalm 19 and the Gospel of John 2:13-22)
[3] Psalm 19:1 The Message
[4] Psalm 14:1
[5] Psalm 90:2
[6] New Commentary on the Whole Bible: Old Testament Volume © 1990. Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, IL 60187
[7]Gerald L. Borchert, The New American Commentary, Vol 25A,      (Nashville, Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1996), 164
[8] Isaiah 64:6
[9] The Message

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